Cheal v. El Camino Hospital , 167 Cal. Rptr. 3d 485 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 1/31/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    CAROL CHEAL,                                       H036548
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                   Super. Ct. No. CV14348)
    v.
    EL CAMINO HOSPITAL,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    Plaintiff Carol Cheal brought this action for age discrimination against her former
    employer, defendant El Camino Hospital. Defendant successfully prevailed upon the
    trial court to grant summary judgment in its favor despite numerous materially disputed
    facts. As too often happens, the merits of the case were obscured to the point of
    invisibility in the deluge of statements, counter-statements and objections, that mark
    modern summary judgment practice. The record clearly raises triable issues of fact with
    respect to whether plaintiff was performing adequately at the time of her discharge and
    whether the discharge was the product of a belief to the contrary or of discriminatory
    animus against older workers on the part of plaintiff’s immediate supervisor. We will
    therefore reverse the judgment.
    BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff worked in defendant’s Nutrition Services Department from August 1987
    until her discharge in October 2008 at age 61. At all relevant times she held the position
    of Dietetic Technician Registered, or “Diet Tech.” For present purposes it may be
    assumed, as defendant asserts, that her duties were the same as those of a “menu clerk” or
    “Diet Clerk[].” They involved the preparation of menus for patient meals, while adhering
    to procedures intended to ensure that the correct foods reached the correct patients.
    Up to and including her performance evaluation in August 2007, plaintiff always
    received a rating of “Meets Standards,” which she declared without contradiction was
    “the highest category of performance on the Hospital’s ‘Performance Evaluation.’ ” But
    things changed after July 2007, when defendant hired Kim Bandelier to supervise all
    employees on the clinical side of nutritional services, including plaintiff. By
    January 2008, Bandelier was accusing plaintiff of numerous shortcomings. On
    April 14, 2008, Bandelier gave plaintiff a written warning for failure to conform to the
    hospital’s “two-patient identifier procedure,” discussed in more detail below (see
    pt. II(E)(2), post). On June 3 she issued a second, “[f]inal” warning for failure to comply
    with the same procedure.
    On Monday, September 8, 2008, Bandelier accused plaintiff of incorrectly
    preparing one or more menus for a patient restricted to “pudding thick” liquids, in a
    manner that allowed, or could have allowed, the patient to receive thinner, “honey thick”
    liquids. On September 25, 2008, a hospital manager told plaintiff that she was no longer
    considered competent to perform her duties as a diet clerk or diet tech, and that she could
    either take another position in the nutrition services department, accept a severance
    package, or be discharged. About a week later, plaintiff informed defendant that any
    further communication should go through her attorney. On October 10, 2008, defendant
    notified plaintiff that her employment was terminated.
    Plaintiff filed this action on April 30, 2009, asserting causes of action for age
    discrimination, wrongful demotion and termination, failure to investigate or take
    corrective action against age discrimination, and retaliation for complaints of unlawful
    discrimination. Defendant answered with a general denial and 14 affirmative defenses.
    2
    On August 13, 2010, defendant filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting 77
    supposedly undisputed facts in support. Plaintiff responded to each of these assertions
    and submitted 37 additional facts that she contended precluded summary judgment. Each
    party lodged numerous objections to the evidence put forth by the opposing party. The
    court issued an order sustaining some objections, overruling the rest, and granting the
    motion for summary judgment. The court wrote that summary judgment was warranted
    because (1) “[p]laintiff fail[ed] to show she performed her job in a satisfactory manner”;
    (2) defendant “establishe[d] a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its actions” while
    “[p]laintiff . . . [did] not produce substantial evidence that Defendant’s stated reasons
    were untrue or pretextual, or that Defendant acted with a discriminatory animus” (italics
    in original); (3) having failed to make a prima facie case of age discrimination, plaintiff
    could not establish her claims for wrongful termination and failure to investigate or take
    corrective action; and (4) because plaintiff had already been “disciplined on numerous
    occasions” when she first complained, plaintiff could not make out a cause of action for
    unlawful retaliation.
    Plaintiff filed this timely appeal.
    DISCUSSION
    I. General Principles
    “ ‘We summarized the principles governing an appeal of this type in Reeves v.
    Safeway Stores (2004) 
    121 Cal. App. 4th 95
    , 106–107 [
    16 Cal. Rptr. 3d 717
    ] (Reeves): “On
    appeal from an order granting summary judgment ‘we must independently examine the
    record to determine whether triable issues of material fact exist. [Citations.]’ [Citation.]
    The question is whether defendant ‘ “ ‘conclusively negated a necessary element of the
    plaintiff’s case or demonstrated that under no hypothesis is there a material issue of fact
    that requires the process of trial.’ [Citation.]” [Citation.]’ [Citations]; (see Guz v.
    Bechtel National Inc. (2000) 
    24 Cal. 4th 317
    , 335, fn. 7 [
    100 Cal. Rptr. 2d 352
    , 
    8 P.3d 3
    1089], . . . (Guz) [‘the issue . . . is simply whether, and to what extent, the evidence
    submitted for and against the motion . . . discloses issues warranting a trial’].) . . .
    [Citation.] Moreover, ‘we must view the evidence in a light favorable to plaintiff as the
    losing party [citation], liberally construing [his] evidentiary submission while strictly
    scrutinizing defendants’ own showing, and resolving any evidentiary doubts or
    ambiguities in plaintiff’s favor. [Citations.]’ [Citations.] And a plaintiff resisting a
    motion for summary judgment bears no burden to establish any element of his or her case
    unless and until the defendant presents evidence either affirmatively negating that
    element (proving its absence in fact), or affirmatively showing that the plaintiff does not
    possess and cannot acquire evidence to prove its existence. [Citations.]” ’ (Mamou v.
    Trendwest Resorts (2008) 
    165 Cal. App. 4th 686
    , 710-711, 
    81 Cal. Rptr. 3d 406
    (Mamou).)
    In determining whether a triable issue was raised or dispelled, we must disregard any
    evidence to which a sound objection was made in the trial court, but must consider any
    evidence to which no objection, or an unsound objection, was made. (See Reid v. Google
    [(2010)] 
    50 Cal. 4th 512
    , 534, 
    113 Cal. Rptr. 3d 327
    , 
    235 P.3d 988
    ; Code of Civ. Proc.,
    § 437c, subds. (b)(5), (c), (d).) Such evidentiary questions, however, are subject to the
    overarching principle that the proponent’s submissions are scrutinized strictly, while the
    opponent’s are viewed liberally.’ ” (McCaskey v. California State Auto. Assn. (2010) 
    189 Cal. App. 4th 947
    , 956-957.)
    II. Unsatisfactory Performance
    A. Introduction
    The first and primary ground cited by the trial court for its entry of summary
    judgment was this: “As Plaintiff made several mistakes on menus between January and
    May in 2008, Plaintiff fails to show she performed her job in a satisfactory manner.”
    Competent performance is part of a plaintiff’s “prima facie case of discrimination” 
    (Guz, supra
    , 24 Cal.4th at p. 354) under the special burden-shifting analysis devised in
    4
    McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green (1973) 
    411 U.S. 792
    , 802-804 (McDonnell Douglas).
    Under that approach, an employment discrimination plaintiff raises a presumption of
    liability by “provid[ing] evidence that (1) he was a member of a protected class, (2) he
    was . . . performing competently in the position he held, (3) he suffered an adverse
    employment action, such as termination, demotion, or denial of an available job, and
    (4) some other circumstance suggests discriminatory motive. [Citations.]” 
    (Guz, supra
    ,
    at p. 355.)
    The trial court thus ruled that plaintiff would be unable at trial to establish the
    second factor, i.e., that she was “performing competently in the position [s]he held.” 1
    This contention necessarily implicates two constituent questions: What could a trier of
    fact find to be a competent level of performance; and what level of performance did the
    plaintiff actually render? We turn now to those questions.
    B. Standard of Competent Performance
    What constitutes satisfactory performance is of course a question ordinarily vested in the
    employer’s sole discretion. An employer is free to set standards that might appear
    unreasonable to outside observers, and to discipline employees who fail to meet those
    1
    Although it is often convenient to view the evidence in such cases under the lens
    of McDonnell Douglas and Guz—and that is the framework within which the issues were
    framed and decided below—that approach is not mandatory and need not hamstring
    either the parties or the court. “[W]hen a plaintiff in a discrimination case has direct
    evidence of discrimination as well as the indirect evidence required to make out a prima
    facie case under McDonnell Douglas he does not have to show that either approach,
    taken in isolation from the other, makes out a prima facie case—he can combine them.
    ‘Any demonstration strong enough to support a judgment in the plaintiff’s favor if the
    employer remains silent will do, even if the proof does not fit into a set of pigeonholes.’
    [Citations.] ‘Despite the minutiae of the various proof schemes set forth in McDonnell
    Douglas . . . the straightforward question to be answered in discrimination cases is
    whether the plaintiff has successfully demonstrated that she was the victim of . . .
    discrimination on the part of the employer.’ [Citation.]” (Simple v. Walgreen Co. (7th
    Cir. 2007) 
    511 F.3d 668
    , 670-671 (Posner, J.).)
    5
    standards, so long as the standards are applied evenhandedly. But that does not mean that
    an employer conclusively establishes the governing standard of competence in an
    employment discrimination action merely by asserting that the plaintiff’s performance
    was less than satisfactory. Evidence of the employer’s policies and practices, including
    its treatment of other employees, may support a contention, and an eventual finding, that
    the plaintiff’s job performance did in fact satisfy the employer’s own norms. Such a
    finding not only carries the plaintiff’s burden to show competence under the McDonnell
    Douglas/Guz analysis; it also grounds an inference that the true motive for the challenged
    action lay somewhere else, as in discriminatory animus.
    Here the trial court concluded that plaintiff had failed to show competent
    performance because the evidence showed that she “made several mistakes on menus
    between January and May in 2008.” But aside from triable issues concerning the number
    and magnitude of the “mistakes” she made (discussed below), there was strong evidence
    before the court that the hospital, under its own written policies, anticipated and expected
    such mistakes because, given the nature of the work, they were inevitable. According to
    plaintiff’s uncontradicted account, the hospital prepared about 500 meals a day, which
    required processing 500 menus. Of these, perhaps a third were “special diets.” Each
    food selected by a patient on a special diet had to be checked against, and modified if
    necessary to conform to, the physicians’ orders for that patient. As a result, plaintiff
    declared, “errors by all Diet Office staff invariably resulted.” For this reason, the hospital
    relied on a multi-tiered system of safeguards in which “tally clerk[s]” reviewed the work
    of menu clerks, a “checker” on the kitchen staff compared tray contents to menu entries,
    and the nurses, who actually delivered the trays to special-diet patients, assumed “the
    final responsibility for the check of the food tray.” This statement is substantiated by a
    copy of a written policy attached to, and identified in, plaintiff’s declaration. It states that
    upon delivery of a meal tray to the nursing station, “Nursing staff is responsible for
    6
    immediately confirming the accuracy of each tray by checking the menu heading, room
    number, name and diet order on each menu, with the most recent diet order for that
    patient.”2
    Indeed, plaintiff offered something of a smoking gun on this point in the form of
    the hospital’s printed evaluation form for the diet tech position, which prescribed the
    acceptable rate for certain types of errors. Of seemingly greatest pertinence here is the
    notation, under “menu writing skills,” that the diet tech “uses appropriate food
    consistencies and compositions in accordance with patient’s diet orders and age with less
    than one error per day.” (Emphasis added.) Similar notations appear under “meal tray
    checking skills” (“less than two errors per meal”), “nourishment (NX) checking skills”
    (“less than one error per day”), and use of “MIS and diet office PC” (“less than one error
    per day”). These entries alone seem to belie the trial court’s rationale, i.e., that “several
    mistakes on menus” over a period of four or five months precluded a finding that plaintiff
    had rendered satisfactory performance.
    Also bearing on this subject was evidence of the pervasiveness of similar errors by
    other hospital employees performing similar work. Although neither side attempted to
    quantify these rates, plaintiff declared with respect to the two patient identifier
    requirement, violations of which formed the basis for the two written warnings she
    2
    The trial court sustained relevance and foundational objections both to plaintiff’s
    averments on this subject and to the written policy cited by her. But the evidence was
    clearly relevant, since the existence of multiple safeguards bears on the inevitability of
    errors by workers performing plaintiff’s duties, and thus the extent to which her job
    performance met, or fell short of, the standards imposed on those workers by the hospital.
    As for the objection of insufficient foundation, plaintiff had worked in the hospital’s food
    services department for some 21 years. She was presumably familiar, from her own
    firsthand professional experience, with its policies and practices, and there is no reason to
    suppose she was not familiar with its written policies. For purposes of summary
    judgment, her identification of the attachment as “[a] true and correct copy of the
    Hospital’s policy on this matter” must be accepted at face value.
    7
    received (see pt. II(C)(2), post), “I have personal knowledge that other Diet Staff (diet
    clerks, menu clerks and tally clerks) had problems with and frequently failed to follow
    the ‘two patient identifier’ system as required by Ms. Bandelier.’ ” Of the five other
    workers in the department, all but one were under 40 years of age. Plaintiff declared,
    “When I presented copies of the menu mistakes by these other Diet Staff employees to
    Ms. Bandelier, she made excuses for these other, younger workers’ mistakes. While I
    received discipline and written warnings for failing to follow the ‘two patient identifier’
    system, to my knowledge no other Diet Clerk was disciplined by way of a written
    warning for failing to follow the two patient identifier systems.”3
    Much of defendant’s evidence seems intended to suggest that the errors attributed
    to plaintiff were unacceptably grave because they implicated patient safety. No attempt
    was made, however, to quantify either the number or potential seriousness of mistakes
    committed by other persons performing duties similar to plaintiff’s, or to otherwise
    identify anything like a quantitative standard to which plaintiff’s performance might be
    compared. The only benchmark suggested by the record is the performance evaluation
    form, which suggests that errors of the type attributed to plaintiff would be acceptable at
    3
    Plaintiff also introduced evidence that Bandelier herself said more than once that
    “we all,” referring to everyone in the department, “make[] mistakes.” The trial court
    sustained a hearsay objection to plaintiff’s direct averment of this fact—a ruling which
    appears unsound since the quoted utterances appear to constitute statements on a subject
    as to which Bandelier was authorized to speak on defendant’s behalf to persons under her
    supervision. (See Evid. Code, § 1222.) In any event the court properly overruled
    objections, on grounds of relevance and lack of authentication, to the exhibit in which
    Bandelier’s statements were recorded. The document was obviously relevant, and
    plaintiff adequately authenticated it by identifying it under penalty of perjury as
    “Ms. Bandelier’s Diet Office Meeting notes.” Even if more than this were required, the
    document bears the initials of a “Carol C.”—as well as those, apparently, of other
    meeting attendees—grounding an inference that plaintiff had seen it before. (See Evid.
    Code, § 1400 [“Authentication of a writing means (a) the introduction of evidence
    sufficient to sustain a finding that it is the writing that the proponent of the evidence
    claims it is . . . .”].)
    8
    a rate of “less than one . . . per day.” Defendant has never suggested that plaintiff
    committed such errors with anything approaching a daily or even weekly frequency. For
    this reason alone, the trial court’s chief rationale for granting summary judgment cannot
    be sustained.
    C. Plaintiff’s Actual Performance
    1. “Coachings”
    In addition to triable issues over the performance standards governing plaintiff’s
    work, the record presents substantial evidentiary conflicts over the extent to which
    plaintiff actually committed the “several errors” found by the trial court. Bandelier’s
    declaration and its attachments suggest, by our count, 19 distinct areas or incidents of
    unsatisfactory performance. Sixteen of these consist of “coachings” Bandelier assertedly
    “conducted with” plaintiff as recited in an email Bandelier prepared for a supervisor as
    plaintiff’s discharge neared. Bandelier cited the e-mail in her declaration in support of an
    averment that “[a]lmost immediately upon my arrival, I had to counsel Ms. Cheal on
    mistakes and patient-safety related problems with her job performance.” The intended
    implication, obviously, is that many of the “coaching” occasions pointed to an instance or
    area of unsatisfactory performance.
    Nearly every item on the e-mailed list, however, was squarely controverted by
    plaintiff. The first entry, “soiled menus,” is manifestly intended to suggest that on the
    date specified, plaintiff had been guilty of improperly using such menus. Plaintiff flatly
    denied that she had done so, and that she had been “coached” for doing so. She
    declared, “I was not ‘counseled’ about using soiled menus . . . because I did not have any
    soiled menus I was working with. Rather, during a conversation about overtime,
    Ms. Bandelier simply stated that when there is a soiled menu (e.g. due to a liquid spill,
    coffee, etc.) a new one should be prepared. This conversation . . . did not relate to any
    work I was doing that day or recently.” In other words, Bandelier had taken an abstract
    9
    statement she made about best practices, described it as “coaching,” and cited it as
    somehow reflective of unsatisfactory performance.
    Another entry referred to a “coaching” in September 2007 for “allowing grapefruit
    juice on menu,” which the e-mail described as a “HUGE no no” and “a patient safety
    issue.” Bandelier’s declaration also contains an averment that on an unspecified date,
    plaintiff “allow[ed] grapefruit juice on a diet for which grapefruit was specifically
    forbidden.” Plaintiff flatly denied that she did any such thing, stating that if a patient had
    actually received grapefruit juice in violation of a medical restriction, the patient “must
    have orally requested the juice via the nurse or dietician to the Diet Office.” She referred
    to Bandelier’s own handwritten notes of the incident, which as most pertinent here stated
    only that grapefruit juice had, according to an unidentified source, been “ordered and
    tallied this weekend.”4 Bandelier wrote that she had “spoke[n] w/ [with] Carol [ plaintiff]
    & asked her to remind” two other workers, presumably, to watch for such errors.
    Bandelier also expressed the intention to “send email to all diet office staff.” For
    purposes of summary judgment, plaintiff’s averment that she had no involvement in any
    such error concludes the issue whether this was an instance of unsatisfactory
    performance. 5
    4
    According to plaintiff, “tallying” is a step in which a “ ‘tally clerk’ would
    review all menus, input the appropriate information from the menus into the computer
    system, and place the orders with the kitchen to prepare the foods required for the next
    day’s meals.”
    5
    Typical of defendant’s approach on appeal is its complete disregard of plaintiff’s
    controverting evidence while asserting as an established fact that “she made several
    significant menu errors, such as allowing grapefruit juice on a diet that forbade
    grapefruit.” If defendant persuades a jury of this fact, the finding will be entitled to the
    presumption of correctness in any ensuing appeal. On appeal from summary judgment,
    however, defendant’s assertions on this point are a legal nullity.
    10
    The e-mail also referred to a “coaching” on “consistent carb diets.” Again the
    implication is that plaintiff was doing something wrong, though defendant makes no
    attempt to explain the entry. The sole explanation comes from plaintiff, who declared,
    “This alleged ‘coaching’ had nothing to do with any ‘mistake’ or ‘patient safety incident’
    by me. Rather, it relates solely to Bandelier’s objection to a long-standing Hospital
    policy . . . . On this day, I prepared a diabetic patient’s menu according to the long-
    standing Hospital policy. . . . Bandelier took issue with how the diet staff (specifically
    me) prepared diabetic menus. When I explained to Bandelier that I had prepared the
    patient’s menu in accordance with the Hospital’s long-standing policy, she stated, ‘Oh, I
    didn’t know that. But you are still wrong.’ I replied, ‘Well, if I am wrong, then the whole
    diet office is wrong, because that is how I was trained by the dieticians.’ Ms. Bandelier
    then stated that going forward we must insure that a diabetic patient is limited to 3-4
    carbs per meal. I did not disagree with Ms Bandelier’s change to the Diet Office’s
    practice, and followed it consistently thereafter. . . .”
    A trier of fact could reasonably find that other “coachings” were likewise
    unrelated to any breach of existing performance standards but were reflective instead of
    Bandelier’s introduction of new practices. Thus Bandelier cited plaintiff’s “fail[ure] to
    stamp menus with the name of a drug (Warfarin) that affected what foods were allowed
    on the patient’s menu.” But according to plaintiff, this reflected Bandelier’s “instituting a
    new policy . . . that never existed before.” Similarly, Bandelier’s e-mail indicates that
    plaintiff had to be “coached” about “[m]iss[ing] . . . allergies 3 times (patient safety).”
    Again defendant chose not to favor the court with further explanation, apparently trusting
    the lack of detail to create a durable impression of deficient performance. But according
    to plaintiff this entry referred to her failure to stamp the word “allergy” on certain
    menus—a step for which there was, again, no existing requirement. Instead, she
    declared, the erstwhile practice was to address food allergies by specifying the foods the
    11
    patient was required to avoid; thus the office “had stamps for ‘No Milk’, ‘No dairy
    products’, ‘No milk to drink’ etc.”
    Other “coachings” could easily be viewed by a trier of fact as so trivial that their
    recordation was more suggestive of persecution than of anything resembling legitimate
    concern with performance. The entry about “soiled menus” might easily fall in this
    category. Two other entries in the e-mailed list consist of bare allusions to a “dirty work
    station.” Again plaintiff’s explanation for the entry stands uncontested: One incident
    occurred when “before I went to lunch I took a clean and unused mask from my pocket
    and placed it on my desk. . . . On the other occasion as I arrived to work I pulled my
    gloves out of my pocket and put them on my desk. I had not even sat down yet when Ms.
    Bandelier noticed my glove and told me to keep my area clean. Ms. Bandelier reminded
    us all to keep our work stations clean as they were shared by others. I followed her
    instructions and did not leave a dirty work station.”
    The last incident listed in Bandelier’s memo occurred in July 2008 and is
    described only as “Lemon wedge on neutropenic diet.” No attempt has been made to
    substantiate this incident, which plaintiff contends was entirely fabricated. She declared,
    “Ms. Bandelier approached me in the Diet Office and stated, ‘I don’t know what patient it
    is or what room number, but you allowed a lemon wedge on a patient’s menu.’[6] I would
    6
    The trial court erred when it sustained defendant’s hearsay objection to this
    statement. The first test for hearsay is whether the extrajudicial statement is being
    offered for the truth of the matter asserted. (Evidence Code section 1200, subd. (a).)
    Here the matter asserted was that that plaintiff left a lemon wedge on a tray. Plaintiff
    obviously did not offer the evidence to prove this assertion, but rather as evidence that
    Bandelier had falsely accused her of the described conduct. A statement offered for such
    a purpose can never offend the rule against hearsay.
    On appeal defendant does not defend the error induced by its meritless hearsay
    objection, contending instead that the lemon wedge accusation is a “red herring,” and
    plaintiff’s references to it “[i]nexplicabl[e],” because “Plaintiff received no discipline for
    12
    not have allowed a lemon wedge on such a diet and in fact when she stated she did not
    know who it was, I undertook to investigate the issue, found the only patient’s room with
    that diet on the 6th floor and questioned the nurse . . . about the patient’s tray. The nurse
    stated the patient in question was no longer neutropenic. Ms. Bandelier never showed me
    the menu with the lemon wedge order, despite my request.” Although defendant’s
    hearsay objection to the penultimate sentence was properly sustained, plaintiff’s
    declaration nonetheless supports an inference that she investigated Bandelier’s accusation
    and was unable to find any factual basis for it. That evidence tended to refute the
    accusation.
    2. “Two Patient Identifier” Violations
    Several of the alleged performance deficiencies, including both of the written
    warnings preceding plaintiff’s discharge, consisted of failures to strictly comply with the
    “two patient identifier” procedure introduced by Bandelier. According to Bandelier, this
    procedure required menu clerks to mark restricted-diet menus with the patient’s first and
    last name and date of birth so that the person delivering the meal could use that
    information to confirm the identity of the patient to whom it was delivered. The date of
    birth was to be marked with a highlighter in order to flag the menu as a special one and to
    make the information easier to find. Apparently this information was to be written not
    only once on a menu sheet but three times, i.e., next to each meal. Plaintiff declared
    without contradiction that the policy only applied to patients with certain medically
    restricted diets, i.e., those with “dysphagi[a] [difficulty swallowing properly], bariatric
    stage I and II, food allergies and drug interaction.”
    Plaintiff conceded that in the first few months after the policy’s adoption, she did
    not always strictly conform to it, sometimes failing in particular to enter a patient’s first
    the issue.” Bandelier herself cited this supposed incident in her memorandum, and by
    reference in her declaration, as evidence of deficient performance.
    13
    name or to mark the date of birth with a highlighter. However, she declared, “I have
    personal knowledge that other Diet Staff (diet clerks, menu clerks and tally clerks) had
    problems with and frequently failed to follow the ‘two patient identifier’ system as
    required by Ms. Bandelier.” Bandelier acknowledged that plaintiff commented on the
    pervasiveness of these errors by other workers, but declared that she “repeatedly advised
    Ms. Cheal that if Diet Clerks or other employees made mistakes in their work, it was
    Ms. Cheal’s responsibility to report those mistakes.” How Bandelier responded to
    plaintiff’s reports is somewhat beside the point, though a trier of fact might find an
    interesting discrepancy in the seeming fact that Bandelier hunted down plaintiff’s errors
    on her own initiative, while leaving the errors of younger workers to be discovered and
    reported, if at all, by others. The more pertinent question is whether defendant
    established that plaintiff’s infractions of the policy exceeded the hospital’s norms—as
    established, for instance, by the rate and severity of errors committed by other workers.
    Defendant plainly failed to establish the absence of a triable issue of fact on this point. In
    addition to plaintiff’s testimony—and Bandelier’s acknowledgment of plaintiff’s
    contemporaneous reports—a tally clerk testified that in her estimation, another menu
    clerk “made a lot of mistakes too”—probably more than plaintiff. There is no suggestion
    that the identified clerk received anything like the disciplinary attention Bandelier
    devoted to plaintiff.
    A factfinder could also conclude that Bandelier substantially exaggerated the
    number and severity of plaintiff’s violations of the two patient identifier policy—or at
    least that defendant failed to substantiate the number and severity claimed. Bandelier
    declared that on April 8, 2008, plaintiff committed violations “on six different menus.”
    According to plaintiff, however, the first two menus were not subject to the two patient
    identifier procedure. The first involved a patient on a “Dental/Mech soft diet,” which
    according to plaintiff, “is not considered a ‘special diet.’ ” The second involved a
    14
    liquids-only diet which, according to plaintiff, required special handling obviating the
    two patient identifier entries required for the restricted diets subject to the protocol.
    Plaintiff concedes that on the third of the six menus, the two patient identifier
    information, though present, lacks highlighting on “one of the three menus,” i.e., the
    space for one of the three meals listed on the page. In other words, the required
    information was presented—and properly highlighted—at two other points on the same
    page.
    Plaintiff points out quite correctly that redactions on the next two menus render
    them incompetent or at best ambiguous with respect to the claimed errors. One of them
    bears an apparent sticky note with the handwritten legend, “No b-day [¶] No 1st name.”
    However, on the copy in the record, what appears to be a rectangular redaction mark
    appears at or near two of the three places where a date of birth would apparently be
    entered. This supports an inference that the information was lacking, at most, from one
    of the three redundant locations. On the next menu a sticky note contains the legend,
    “Need 1st name,” but since the names have been entirely obliterated it is impossible to
    tell whether the first name was missing from all three meals or only one meal. The last
    menu bears a sticky note saying “No b-date,” and no obvious redactions where a
    birthdate might appear. But as to it, too, plaintiff observes with some justice that given
    defendant’s redactions, it is impossible to verify Bandelier’s characterization of the
    document.
    In an attempt to fill this evidentiary vacuum, Bandelier declared that she had
    “reviewed the color copies of the menus in my file, which contain the unredacted
    patients’ names and show the absence of some highlighted birth dates to confirm that
    these are the menus that correspond to this disciplinary action.” (Italics added.) This
    proves at most that “some highlighted birth dates” were absent from one or more of the
    15
    six menus, or more precisely, from one or more of the 18 places where this information
    should have appeared.
    In any event there is no suggestion that plaintiff failed to observe the two patient
    identifier protocol after June 8, 2008. The evidence thus supports an inference that, even
    if she was slower to adapt to the protocol than other employees—a premise defendant has
    failed to show is free of factual controversy—she had come into full compliance some
    four months before her discharge.
    3. Wrong Liquids Incident
    Plaintiff also raised a triable issue of fact whether the incident immediately
    preceding her discharge constituted an instance of deficient performance. The more-or-
    less undisputed facts concerning this incident appear to be these: A medical order was
    issued on Friday, September 5, 2008, restricting the patient in room 310A to “pudding
    thick” liquids. Plaintiff prepared the patient’s menus that day and the next day, which
    covered meals on September 6 and 7. There is no competent evidence that either of these
    menus was in any manner deficient.
    On Monday, September 8, a speech therapist apparently reported to Bandelier that
    she had observed “honey thick” liquids on the patient’s tray, instead of the “pudding
    thick” liquids to which the patient was restricted. Assuming this reflected an error in the
    patient’s menu, the menu would have been prepared the previous day by one Rebecca.
    Several hours after learning of the matter, and near the end of the shift, Bandelier went to
    the menu office, where plaintiff was still working on menus for the next day’s meals.
    Bandelier found the menu for room 310A, and saw that it had been stamped “Thick
    Liquid (honey consist.),” with no notation of the “pudding thick” restriction. She showed
    the menu to plaintiff, along with the nutrition order restricting the patient to pudding
    thick liquids.
    16
    Apart from these facts, the parties’ versions and interpretations of events diverge
    materially. First, a conflict exists with respect to what the speech therapist told Bandelier
    concerning the erroneous liquids she apparently observed. According to Bandelier, the
    therapist told her that the patient had been fed the wrong liquids “over the previous
    weekend” and that “the improper thickness of the liquid contributed to a fluid build-up in
    the patient’s lungs and aggravated her medical condition.”7 The speech therapist,
    however, testified in deposition that while she might have told Bandelier the patient had
    “gunk in her lungs,” that was a medical condition predating the dietary restriction and not
    something she attributed, or could have attributed, to any error in feeding.8 Nor is there
    7
    The trial court sustained a hearsay objection to these statements, but the only
    proper effect of that objection would be to prevent the admission of Bandelier’s
    statements as proof of the matters supposedly reported by the speech therapist. Those
    statements remained admissible and highly relevant to support an inference that
    Bandelier did not accurately record or relate what she had actually been told.
    8
    Defendant objected successfully to the speech therapist’s deposition testimony
    on the ground that it was irrelevant—an assertion we emphatically reject. Bandelier’s
    declaration recapitulates for nearly three pages her investigation of the original supposed
    error, and attaches and ratifies another 19 pages of contemporaneous documentation.
    These accounts include the repeated attribution of statements to the speech therapist to
    the effect that the patient had in fact been fed the wrong liquid, that this had gone on all
    weekend, that the patient had inhaled some of this material, and that medical
    complications had resulted. It is true that Bandelier then purported to disclaim any
    reliance on these materials, averring that “although it was important for me as a manager
    to understand what had happened with the patient over the weekend, I did not attribute
    any menu-related error by Ms. Cheal other than on September 8, 2008.” But this
    disclaimer was disingenuous to say the least. On appeal defendant continues to assert as
    a fact that the patient “had been given ‘honey-thick’ fluids all weekend,” and that this had
    “contributed to a fluid build-up in the patient’s lungs,” “aggravat[ing] her medical
    condition.” A party cannot open the door to an issue in an effort to portray events in a
    particular light and then slam the door shut on his opponent merely by asserting that he
    does not really place any reliance on the matters thus introduced. Having suggested that
    plaintiff bore responsibility for a series of injurious errors, defendant could not exclude,
    on relevance grounds, controverting evidence. The trial court erred in allowing itself to
    be trifled with in this manner.
    17
    any evidence, other than Bandelier’s account, that she told Bandelier the patient had
    actually ingested any improper food. She denied telling Bandelier anything about what
    the patient might have eaten over the weekend. According to Bandelier, the therapist told
    her that the nurse responsible for the patient had said “that the ‘honey thick’ liquids
    presented on the patient’s tray on the morning of September 8th were the ‘same as what
    the patient had been getting all weekend.’ ” But the nurse supposedly named by the
    therapist, when questioned, disclaimed any memory of the patient.9
    In any event there was ample competent evidence that plaintiff committed no
    menu errors on the weekend of September 5-7. She declared without contradiction that
    she correctly prepared the patient’s menu on September 5 and 6. On at least one of those
    days, a tally clerk recalled seeing a menu correctly marked by plaintiff with the legend
    “pudding thick.” If an erroneous menu was prepared on September 7—affecting the
    meals served on September 8—it was prepared by Rebecca. Although defendant made
    some attempt to imply that plaintiff might bear some responsibility for the posited error
    by Rebecca, that suggestion was wholly ineffectual to sustain a summary judgment.10
    9
    The nurse testified in deposition that according to his timecards, he had not
    worked in the wing including room 310A on the weekend of September 5-7. The trial
    court sustained objections to this testimony on the ground that it constituted improper
    secondary evidence of the contents of a writing. It is true that the witness seemed to be
    testifying more about the contents of the timecards than about his own knowledge and
    recollection of events. But with a proper foundation, the timecards themselves would
    presumably be admissible either as business records or as past recollection recorded. We
    do not believe a curable objection going merely to the form of evidence should be
    allowed to play a dispositive role in securing summary judgment. It benefits no one but
    the original defendant to dismiss a substantively meritorious action for damages only to
    generate a new action for legal malpractice.
    10
    Bandelier declared that Rebecca had been trained by plaintiff, apparently
    implying that any errors by the former were attributable to the latter. Apart from the
    questionable logic on which this implication rests, plaintiff declared that she was
    responsible for only two of Rebecca’s six days of relevant training. Bandelier also
    declared that when questioned about the September 7 menu, Rebecca said she did not
    18
    It follows that if any error was to be attributed to plaintiff with respect to room
    310A—based on this record—it had to rest on the premise that plaintiff prepared an
    erroneous menu on Monday, September 8. As to that issue, plaintiff raised a triable issue
    by asserting that she had not yet finished with the menu when Bandelier intervened in its
    preparation. Plaintiff declared, “Because I had not yet completed my ‘review’ process of
    all menus, I had not yet written ‘pudding’ by the ‘thick’ stamp, which was my custom
    and practice. It is important to note that the Hospital does not have a ‘pudding thick’
    stamp, so we use the ‘honey thick’ stamp cross[,] out honey[,] and write ‘pudding’ when
    appropriate. As my regular practice was to go over all menus before ending my shift, I
    had not yet completed my review and menu preparation. Thus, I had not had the
    opportunity yet to cross out the word ‘honey’ and hand write ‘pudding’ next to the thick
    stamp just as I did on this patient’s menus for September 5 and 6.”11 (Emphasis omitted)
    know how to prepare a “pudding thick” menu and that “if she had not known what to do,
    she would have copied the menu from the day before.” This assertion on its face grounds
    two conflicting but equally likely inferences: that the September 6 menu was in error, or
    that the September 7 menu was not in error. Indeed there is no direct proof that any of
    the menus for room 310A contained an error; it is simply assumed that the menu prepared
    on September 7 was in error because the wrong food was, reportedly, delivered to the
    room on September 8. But Bandelier’s own investigation pointed to several other
    potential causes for this mishap, including a “confusing” system of classifying thickness
    restrictions, and ignorance among at least some kitchen workers on the distinctions.
    Indeed Bandelier had originally “figured the kitchen staff made the error,” but after
    investigating was “not so sure” because it appeared that many clinical-side workers were
    similarly confused or ignorant. At least two of them reported that they “did not know the
    correct way to modify a pudding thick diet order.” At the same time, the hospital’s own
    record-keeping system, or lack thereof, made it impossible to ascertain the cause of the
    supposed error. As Bandelier herself wrote, “I have no way of knowing if this patient’s
    menu was or was not modified correctly before today. We have a paper system in the
    diet office—once the menu leaves, it’s gone forever unless someone on the floor saves it
    and sends it back to the diet office.” The menu most at issue in the supposed feeding
    error—the one prepared on September 7—was “long gone.”
    11
    If the distinction between “pudding thick” and “honey thick” was as critical to
    patient safety as defendant claims, it seems remarkable that defendant had not provided a
    19
    Bandelier went to great lengths at the time, and defendant goes to great lengths
    now, to discredit plaintiff’s statements on this point. But it is not the office of summary
    judgment to weed out claims based on judges’ doubts about the veracity of supporting
    evidence. We find nothing in the record rendering this testimony so intrinsically
    unworthy of belief that a trier of fact could not credit it.
    If the menu was still awaiting final review, as plaintiff insists, then the features
    pounced upon by Bandelier had not ripened into an actual defect. A factfinder could so
    conclude. After all, so far as the record shows, plaintiff had properly prepared the same
    patient’s menus on two prior days. If her testimony about her work procedures is
    believed—and as noted, we see no basis to hold that a factfinder could not believe it—
    then this was not an instance of deficient performance.12
    4. Conceded Mistake
    Plaintiff concedes making one serious error under Bandelier’s supervision: On
    January 23, 2008—eight-plus months before her discharge—she wrote on a patient’s
    menu that the patient was restricted to “semi-thin” liquids when in fact the patient had
    been restricted to thick liquids. Bandelier gave her an “oral counseling” reflected in a
    written memorandum placed in plaintiff’s file. As discussed above, however, a trier of
    fact could conclude that under defendant’s own written policies, the occasional
    commission of such errors fell within the norm of acceptable performance. Defendant
    “pudding thick” stamp to the menu office, thereby eliminating the workaround described
    by plaintiff, the hazards of which seem obvious.
    12
    Bandelier made much of the fact, as defendant continues to do, that when
    confronted with the supposedly defective menu, plaintiff said, “I think I did it right last
    time.” Defendant views this statement as an implied concession that the September 8
    menu was in error. But according to plaintiff, she was merely pointing out to Bandelier,
    quite reasonably, that she had correctly prepared menus for the same patient on two
    previous days. The correct interpretation of plaintiff’s words is obviously fraught with
    issues that only a trier of fact can resolve.
    20
    made no attempt to demonstrate that similar errors were not made by other, younger
    employees at similar or greater rates.
    A factfinder could conclude that, apart from this one error eight months before her
    discharge, plaintiff exhibited no significant failures of competence while under
    Bandelier’s supervision. Since she had up to that time always been found to have
    rendered satisfactory performance, a jury could find that Bandelier’s list of supposed
    deficiencies had more to do with Bandelier’s attitude toward plaintiff than with plaintiff’s
    actual performance. Plaintiff presented ample evidence that her performance was in fact
    satisfactory, including defendant’s own policies indicating that, at worst, she committed
    far fewer errors than might be anticipated, and deemed acceptable, in one performing her
    duties.
    We therefore cannot accept the trial court’s conclusion that “As Plaintiff made
    several mistakes on menus between January and May in 2008, Plaintiff fails to show she
    performed her job in a satisfactory manner.” The record does not show “several errors”
    as a matter of law, and it does not show that some number of errors—even “several”—
    necessarily fell below the hospital’s standards of performance.
    We turn to the question whether the judgment can be sustained on another ground.
    III.      Nondiscriminatory Reason vs. Discriminatory Animus
    A. Introduction
    The trial court adopted a second rationale in support of summary judgment: that
    (1) defendant “establishe[d] a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for its actions,” and
    (2) plaintiff failed to “produce substantial evidence that Defendant’s stated reasons were
    untrue or pretextual, or that Defendant acted with a discriminatory animus, such that a
    reasonable trier of fact could conclude that Defendant engaged in intentional
    discrimination or other unlawful action. [Citation; record citations.]” (Fn. omitted.)
    This was a reference to the second and third stages of the McDonnell Douglas/Guz
    21
    burden-shifting process: If the plaintiff makes a prima facie showing—as we have found
    plaintiff could do here at trial—“the burden shifts to the employer to rebut the
    presumption by producing admissible evidence, sufficient to ‘raise[] a genuine issue of
    fact’ and to ‘justify a judgment for the [employer],’ that its action was taken for a
    legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason. [Citations.]” 
    (Guz, supra
    , 24 Cal.4th at pp. 355-
    356.) Legitimate reasons are those “that are facially unrelated to prohibited bias, and
    which, if true, would thus preclude a finding of discrimination. [Citations.]” (Id. at
    p. 358, fn. omitted.) The employer’s reasons “need not necessarily have been wise or
    correct,” so long as they were not discriminatory. (Ibid.) Such a showing by the
    employer rebuts the presumption of unlawful discrimination, requiring the plaintiff-
    employee to come forward with evidence that the challenged treatment was in fact the
    product of an unlawful discriminatory motive. (Reid v. 
    Google, supra
    , 
    50 Cal. 4th 512
    ,
    520, fn. 2.)
    Here the reason defendant offered for plaintiff’s discharge was the same one we
    have already examined: that plaintiff was performing her job in an unsatisfactory
    manner. As we have already concluded, the record presents triable issues of fact as to
    whether this was actually the case. However, the question here is slightly different: Not
    whether a nondiscriminatory ground for discharge existed in fact, but whether defendant
    discharged plaintiff on the basis of a genuine belief that such a justification existed. As
    noted above, the relevance of a finding in defendant’s favor is that it dispels the
    presumption of discrimination and requires plaintiff to come forward with additional
    evidence supporting an inference that her discharge was actually the result of unlawful
    discrimination. That—and not “pretext”—is the fundamental question: “The central
    issue is and should remain whether the evidence as a whole supports a reasoned inference
    that the challenged action was the product of discriminatory or retaliatory animus. The
    employer’s mere articulation of a legitimate reason for the action cannot answer this
    22
    question; it can only dispel the presumption of improper motive that would otherwise
    entitle the employee to a judgment in his favor. Thus, citing a legitimate reason for the
    challenged action will entitle the employer to summary judgment only when the
    employee’s showing, while sufficient to invoke the presumption, is too weak to sustain a
    reasoned inference in the employee’s favor.” 
    (Mamou, supra
    , 
    165 Cal. App. 4th 686
    , 715;
    see 
    Reeves, supra
    , 
    121 Cal. App. 4th 95
    , 112, fn. 11 [criticizing cases in which “the
    ‘pretext’ tail wags the whole anti-discrimination dog”].)
    B. Confession of Bias
    Here we think the many evidentiary conflicts and uncertainties about the litany of
    accusations lodged against plaintiff by Bandelier go far toward casting the legitimacy of
    the cited justification in doubt and supporting in its stead an inference of discriminatory
    animus. In addition, however, plaintiff presented another smoking gun in the declaration
    of Diana Hendry, a former friend of Bandelier’s, who averred that Bandelier once
    confessed to her that she favored younger and pregnant workers, and that she was
    concerned about this treatment being noticed. According to Hendry, “One evening when
    I was at Ms. Bandelier’s house for dinner, she said to me, ‘We shouldn’t have lunch
    anymore or talk socially at work . . . People are starting to notice I’m favoring the
    younger and pregnant ones.’ ” (Ellipsis in original, italics added.)
    If this statement was admissible, it provided an ample basis for a finding that
    Bandelier’s treatment of plaintiff had nothing to do with genuine deficiencies in
    plaintiff’s work and everything to do with discriminatory animus against older workers.
    However the trial court sustained a hearsay objection to this averment, declaring it
    “double hearsay,” in that it consists of “Hendry’s recitation of what Bandelier told her for
    the truth of the out of court statements.” This characterization is accurate as far as it
    goes; Hendry’s declaration was itself hearsay, and Bandelier’s statement to her was thus
    hearsay within hearsay. (See Evid. Code, § 1200, subd. (a).) The question is thus
    23
    whether each “layer” of hearsay is dispelled by a hearsay exception. The first layer
    certainly is: written declarations under penalty of perjury are admissible in motion
    practice despite their hearsay character. (Code Civ. Proc., §§ 2009, 2015.5.) Indeed the
    summary judgment statute explicitly contemplates reliance on declarations both in
    support of and opposition to the motion. (Code Civ. Proc., § § 437c, subd. (b).)
    The second layer—Bandelier’s statements to Hendry—present a more genuine
    question. Plaintiff characterizes them as “admissions” or “party admissions,” citing
    Evidence Code section 1222, which codifies an exception for statements by a person
    authorized to speak for a party. It is far from clear, however, that Bandelier could be
    found to have been authorized to state to a coworker that she was discriminating against a
    protected class of employees. (See O’Neill v. Novartis Consumer Health, Inc. (2007) 
    147 Cal. App. 4th 1388
    , 1403 [no error in exclusion of meeting minutes signed by Director of
    Regulatory Affairs, in absence of further evidence that he had authority to speak for
    company]; Morgan v. Regents of University of Cal. (2000) 
    88 Cal. App. 4th 52
    , 70
    [statements by human resources employees concerning futility of applications for rehire
    were not vicarious admissions where no evidence of authority in that “none of the
    individuals under discussion were involved in the decisions not to rehire appellant”]; cf.
    O’Mary v. Mitsubishi Electronics America, Inc. (1997) 
    59 Cal. App. 4th 563
    , 570-574
    [holding admissible vice president’s statement to managers that director said company
    wanted to replace managers over 40].)
    A more colorable ground for treating Bandelier’s statements as vicarious
    admissions might be found in Evidence Code section 1224 (§ 1224), which makes
    admissible, against a party to litigation, statements by a person on whose breach of duty
    that party’s liability may depend.13
    13
    “When the liability, obligation, or duty of a party to a civil action is based in
    whole or in part upon the liability, obligation, or duty of the declarant, or when the claim
    or right asserted by a party to a civil action is barred or diminished by a breach of duty by
    24
    However, we need not determine whether Bandelier’s reported statements to
    Hendry are admissible as authorized or vicarious admissions, for we have concluded that
    they were admissible as declarations against Bandelier’s interest. Under Evidence Code
    section 1230 (§ 1230), evidence of an extrajudicial statement is admissible over a hearsay
    objection if “the statement, when made, was so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary
    or proprietary interest, or so far subjected him to the risk of civil or criminal liability, . . .
    or created such a risk of making him an object of hatred, ridicule, or social disgrace in the
    community, that a reasonable man in his position would not have made the statement
    unless he believed it to be true.” (§ 1230.)
    A statement by Bandelier to a then-friend that she “favored” younger employees—
    and thus disfavored (discriminated against) older employees—was antithetical to her
    “pecuniary” interests in that, if publicly known, it would expose her employer to liability
    and jeopardize her own present and future employment. Although we have found no
    apposite California decision, a leading federal case held admissible, as a statement
    against interest, a worker’s statement to fire investigators that he and some coworkers had
    entered their employer’s premises after hours and had been smoking there not long before
    an early morning fire. (Gichner v. Antonio Troiano Tile & Marble Co. (D.C. Cir. 1969)
    
    410 F.2d 238
    , 242 (Gichner), cited in House Comm. on Judiciary, Fed. Rules of Evid.,
    H.R.Rep. No. 650, 93d Cong., 1st Sess., p. 16 (1973); 1974 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News
    7075, 7089.) Judge Wright wrote that “[a] statement is against pecuniary and proprietary
    interest when it threatens the loss of employment, or reduces the chances for future
    employment, or entails possible civil liability.” (Id. at p. 242.) The worker’s “admission
    that he had been there after hours, for a purpose unrelated to his employment, and while
    the declarant, evidence of a statement made by the declarant is as admissible against the
    party as it would be if offered against the declarant in an action involving that liability,
    obligation, duty, or breach of duty.” (§ 1224.)
    25
    there did something which may have caused the destruction of his employer’s stock in
    trade, reflects on his responsibility and trustworthiness, and can reasonably be said to
    jeopardize his standing with his employer.” (Ibid.)
    A supervisor’s statement that she “favors” one class of employees, potentially at
    the expense of a protected class, creates a similar risk of future economic loss. The
    California Supreme Court has emphasized the career hazards faced by a discriminating
    supervisor as a justification for holding such persons immune from civil liability for such
    conduct. In Reno v. Baird (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 640
    , 654-655, the court rejected a criticism
    that immunity would amount to a “ ‘free pass’ ” to the offending supervisor, stating,
    “ ‘An employer subjected to well-founded claims of employment discrimination as a
    result of an employee’s intentional acts of discrimination is not likely to look favorably
    upon the offending employee. To the contrary, the employer, to protect its own interests
    and to avoid further liability, almost certainly will impose some form of discipline upon
    the offending employee. That discipline may include a ‘free pass’ to the unemployment
    line, a result that would seem particularly likely if the employee engages in repeated acts
    of intentional discrimination against fellow employees.’ ” (Reno v. Baird (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 640
    , 654-655, quoting Lenhardt v. Basic Institute of Technology, Inc. (8th Cir.
    1995) 
    55 F.3d 377
    , 381.) The court returned to this point in rejecting a parallel argument
    that its holding would reduce the effectiveness of the antidiscrimination statutes by
    allowing supervisors to “escape punishment” for discriminatory conduct: “Supervisors
    guilty of engaging in unlawful discrimination, and thus causing their employers to incur
    monetary liability, will often suffer demotion or unemployment. Their reputation with
    potential future employers will also be affected.” (Reno v. 
    Baird, supra
    , at p. 662.)
    We think Bandelier’s statement to Hendry sufficiently jeopardized her career
    prospects to be found against her pecuniary interests for purposes of a hearsay objection.
    26
    It may also be admissible as a declaration against legal interest, i.e., as exposing her to
    civil liability.
    Remarkably, we have found no published California cases applying the “risk of
    civil . . . liability” branch of the exception in section 1230. There are many cases
    applying the exception for statements exposing the declarant to criminal liability, but
    they arise in the context of criminal prosecutions, and having reviewed a number of them
    we believe their holdings should be relied upon with caution in the civil context. They
    typically arise in one of two situations: either the prosecution seeks to introduce an
    absent declarant’s statement that also incriminates the defendant, or the defendant seeks
    to introduce such a statement to show that a third party and not himself is the perpetrator
    of an offense. Both of these situations raise a number of complications not present in
    civil litigation. These include the privilege against self-incrimination; the right to
    confront adverse witnesses; the ease with which evidence of incriminating statements by
    absent declarants may be manufactured; the relative ineffectuality, in many criminal
    prosecutions, of the threat of a perjury prosecution as a deterrent to false testimony; and
    the potential for a miscarriage of justice if credible evidence of third-party culpability is
    categorically excluded. Considerations like these have led courts to require particularized
    indications of trustworthiness where an extrajudicial statement is offered as a declaration
    against penal interest. (See People v. Duarte (2000) 
    24 Cal. 4th 603
    , 610-611.) These
    considerations are largely absent in the context of civil litigation.
    With this caveat, however, we do find some guidance in those cases to the extent
    that they recognize that to come within the exception a statement need not wholly confess
    guilt; it need only be “ ‘distinctly against [the declarant’s] interest.’ ” (People v. Traylor
    (1972) 
    23 Cal. App. 3d 323
    , 331, quoting 5 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed. 1940) § 1457,
    pp. 262-263.) Similarly, the court in 
    Gichner, supra
    , 410 F.2d at page 242, found that the
    statement there sufficiently exposed the declarant to civil liability, notwithstanding that
    27
    the declarant “only stated that [he and his companions] had been smoking, not that they
    had been carelessly smoking.” The court wrote, “[I]t is not necessary for the statement to
    include every aspect of negligence; it is enough if the statement could reasonably provide
    an important link in a chain of evidence which is a basis for civil liability . . . . In the
    circumstances of this case, the admission by Faulds that he had been smoking shortly
    before the fire does not seem so remote or tenuous that it was unlikely to entail his
    possible civil liability.” (Id. at pp. 242-243, fn. omitted.)
    Here a statement by Bandelier that she had been “favoring pregnant and younger
    [workers]” had a distinct tendency not only to jeopardize her career but to build a case
    against her personally for workplace harassment, and perhaps other torts. As already
    noted, she was immune from liability for engaging in most discriminatory employment
    practices. (Reno v. 
    Baird, supra
    , 18 Cal.4th at p. 663; Jones v. Lodge at Torrey Pines
    Partnership (2008) 
    42 Cal. 4th 1158
    , 1173.) But her immunity did not extend to claims of
    discriminatory harassment, for which the Legislature has unmistakably imposed personal
    liability on individual workers.14 (Gov. Code, § 12940, subd. (j)(3).) A confession of
    discriminatory animus against older workers would be highly detrimental in defending a
    harassment claim. Nor was such a claim a remote possibility. In a letter to hospital
    administrators, plaintiff accused Bandelier of a “vendetta” against her, though without
    linking it explicitly to age discrimination.15 A confession by Bandelier that she favored
    14
    In doing so the Legislature overturned Carrisales v. Department of Corrections
    (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 1132
    , 1134, 1140, which had extended immunity to nonsupervising
    coworkers for harassment under FEHA. This left only the question, which the court
    expressly left open, whether the cloak of immunity would also be cast over supervisory
    employees. (Id. at p. 1138, fn. 3.) Before the court had an occasion to reach that
    question, the Legislature intervened, declaring that any coworker may be liable for
    workplace harassment. (Gov. Code, § 12940, subd. (j)(3), enacted by Stats. 2000,
    ch. 1049, § 7.5, p. 7717.)
    15
    The letter, sent on September 11, 2008, chronicled a number of instances of
    unfair and disparate treatment at Bandelier’s hands. It referred to one exchange in which
    28
    younger workers would go far toward making out a cause of action against her
    personally.
    We also note that Bandelier’s statement to Hendry, if actually made, appears
    highly reliable. Certainly no one was in a better position than Bandelier to know whether
    she had been “favor[ing] younger and pregnant” employees. The utterance took place in
    a purely private, personal setting. No motive to fabricate has been suggested. Courts,
    including this one, have found a strong assurance of trustworthiness in the circumstance
    that a statement was made in a “ ‘conversation . . . between friends in a noncoercive
    setting that fosters uninhibited disclosures.’ ” (People v. Tran (2013) 
    215 Cal. App. 4th 1207
    , 1217, quoting People v. Greenberger (1997) 
    58 Cal. App. 4th 298
    , 335, and citing
    People v. Cervantes (2004) 
    118 Cal. App. 4th 162
    , 174-175.) Further, the statement’s
    evident purpose—so far as this record shows—was to enlist Hendry’s cooperation in
    concealing Bandelier’s favoritism. Such a motivation would seem to bolster the against-
    interest aspect by suggesting that Bandelier was conscious of the damaging potential her
    favoritism, if established, could have.
    We conclude that for purposes of summary judgment, at least, the statement in
    question was admissible as a declaration against interest. To the extent the question
    involved any discretion, the trial court’s implied determination to the contrary was an
    abuse of discretion. As we observed at the outset, in ruling on motions for summary
    judgment courts are to “ ‘liberally construe the evidence in support of the party opposing
    summary judgment and resolve doubts concerning the evidence in favor of that party.’ ”
    (Conroy v. Regents of University of Cal. (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 1244
    , 1249-1250, quoting
    Bandelier warned plaintiff that certain conduct of which she accused plaintiff could be
    considered harassment. Plaintiff wrote, “I said to Kim, ‘you mean like you are doing to
    me now?’ ” In her declaration Bandelier denied that she was aware of plaintiff’s specific
    complaints to management, but she acknowledged in deposition that she knew of a
    complaint through the union about “ongoing harassment in nutrition services.”
    29
    Yanowitz v. L’Oreal USA, Inc. (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 1028
    , 1037; see Stationers Corp. v. Dun
    & Bradstreet, Inc. (1965) 
    62 Cal. 2d 412
    , 417 [“In examining the sufficiency of affidavits
    filed in connection with the motion, the affidavits of the moving party are strictly
    construed and those of his opponent liberally construed, and doubts as to the propriety of
    granting the motion should be resolved in favor of the party opposing the motion.”].)
    The order granting summary judgment rested entirely on two propositions:
    (1) Plaintiff had failed to raise a triable issue of fact with respect to whether she had
    performed her job competently; and (2) plaintiff had failed to raise a triable issue of fact
    in controversion of defendant’s claim that she was fired for perceived performance
    problems and not as the result of discriminatory animus. We have concluded that neither
    of these premises can be sustained on this record.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed.
    30
    ______________________________________
    RUSHING, P.J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    ELIA, J.
    ____________________________________
    GROVER, J.
    Cheal v. El Camino Hospital
    H036548
    31
    Trial Court:                                  Santa Clara County Superior Court
    Superior Court No.: CV141348
    Trial Judge:                                  The Honorable
    Mark H. Pierce
    Attorneys for Plaintiff and Appellant         Kastner Kim
    Carol Cheal:                                  Eric C. Kastner
    J. Philip Martin
    Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent        Fitzgerald Abbott & Beardsley,
    El Camino Hospital:                           Sarah E. Robertson
    Mark A. Delgado
    Cheal v. El Camino Hospital
    H036548
    32